Mies van der Rohe Pavilion tickets & tours | Price comparison

Mies van der Rohe Pavilion

TicketLens lets you:
Search multiple websites at onceand find the best offers.
Find tickets, last minuteon many sites, with one search.
Book at the lowest price!Save time & money by comparing rates.
Mies van der Rohe Pavilion, also known as the Barcelona Pavilion and locally Pavelló Mies van der Rohe, is Montjuïc's quiet masterpiece of glass, water, travertine, and onyx. The reflections, the Barcelona chair, and Georg Kolbe's Dawn make this small space feel bigger and stranger than its footprint suggests.

For a first visit, choose a ticket with the audio guide so you get the design story at your own pace, avoid guesswork, and keep the rest of your Montjuïc route flexible.
Select a date to find available tickets, tours & activities:

Tickets with audio guide

Best for first-time visitors who want context without joining a group. The audio guide helps you read the pavilion's reflections, materials, and design logic at your own pace.
Barcelona: Mies van der Rohe Pavilion Ticket and Audio Guide
4.6(409)
 
getyourguide.com
Go to offer

Tickets, cards, and workshops

Use this section for standard entry, repeat-visit cards, and family formats when you want a simpler stop or a more playful return to the pavilion.
Mies van der Rohe Pavilion Card
3.9(7)
 
tiqets.com
Go to offer

6 tips for visiting the Mies van der Rohe Pavilion

1
Book the audio guide first
If this is your first pavilion visit, start with the audio-guide ticket rather than plain entry. In a space this minimal, a little context goes a long way, especially if you are fitting the stop into a short Montjuïc half-day. That way the visit feels intentional, not cryptic.
2
Aim for the first hour
If your priority is quiet photos and cleaner reflections, go early on a weekday or in the last 90 minutes of the day. The pavilion is compact, so even a small crowd changes the mood fast. A calmer window lets you look properly instead of waiting for space.
3
Use Carrer de Lleida as backup
If fairs or events close the usual approach via Avinguda de la Reina Maria Cristina, switch straight to Carrer de Lleida instead of looping around Plaça d'Espanya. It is a small local reroute, but it saves time and keeps the stop easy.
4
Keep the stop focused
Plan around 45 to 60 minutes, or 75 to 90 minutes with the audio guide and photo pauses. This is not a huge site, so the payoff comes from slowing down, not from squeezing in more. That avoids turning a subtle place into a checkbox.
5
Pair it with one neighbor
If you want a cultural half-day, pair the pavilion with CaixaForum Barcelona or Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya. If your group needs something broader and easier, Poble Espanyol is the cleaner add-on. One nearby pairing keeps Montjuïc enjoyable instead of logistical.
6
Check family workshop dates
If you are visiting with children who need more than quiet looking, a family workshop is usually a better fit than plain entry. Dates are limited, so checking early can turn an abstract architecture stop into something hands-on. That way nobody has to admire marble on command.

How to plan a Mies van der Rohe Pavilion stop on Montjuïc

This is one of the easiest architecture stops on Montjuïc, but it works best when you treat it as a focused pause, not a marathon checklist. Set your route, choose your ticket format, and add just one nearby follow-up.

Choose the audio guide for your first visit

Best for first-time visitors who want more than a quick photo stop. The pavilion is small, but its real point is sequence, proportion, and reflection, and the audio guide helps those layers click without locking you into a group schedule. Book this first if you want the clearest introduction and the easiest self-paced visit. Book now.

Approach from Espanya, with a backup route

Most visitors should come via Plaça d'Espanya and walk up Avinguda de la Reina Maria Cristina. If fairs or event setups block that axis, switch to Carrer de Lleida immediately instead of improvising at the foot of the hill. That small decision saves time and keeps the stop calm.

Pair the pavilion with one nearby stop

If you want a design-heavy half-day, add CaixaForum Barcelona or Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya. If you are traveling with children or want something broader and more open-air, Poble Espanyol is the cleaner pairing, while the evening route toward the Magic Fountain of Montjuïc works best only if you still have energy. One deliberate add-on protects the quiet mood that makes the pavilion special.

History and architecture of the Mies van der Rohe Pavilion

What makes this stop memorable is not only its fame, but the way a temporary 1929 building became one of modern architecture's permanent reference points. Knowing that story changes how you read the space.

Built for Barcelona in 1929

The pavilion began as Germany's national pavilion for the 1929 Barcelona International Exposition on Montjuïc, designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Lilly Reich. It was made for an official reception, but the real message was spatial: calm planes, expensive materials, and almost no decoration. Even now, that restraint still feels radical.

Absent for decades, rebuilt in 1986

After the exposition closed, the structure was dismantled in 1930. Its reputation kept growing through drawings, photographs, and architectural debate until the reconstruction project was launched in 1980, began in 1983, and reopened on the original site in 1986. That unusual history is part of the visit, because you are seeing both an icon and a reconstruction.

Watch how the materials do the talking

Glass, steel, Roman travertine, green Alpine marble, ancient green marble from Greece, and golden onyx from the Atlas Mountains create the pavilion's drama without any monumental height. Add the Barcelona chair and Georg Kolbe's Dawn, and the whole place becomes a lesson in how reflections can make a quiet room feel almost theatrical.

Ticket types at the Mies van der Rohe Pavilion

The mapped products here are unusually easy to read, which is refreshing on Montjuïc. They split into one strong first-visit option, one repeat-visit card, and one family format.

Tickets with audio guide

Best for first-time visitors, architecture fans, and anyone who wants the pavilion to make sense quickly. You get standard entry plus the audio guide, so you can move slowly, circle back to the pools, and understand why this small building matters. If you want the clearest value on a single visit, start here. Book now.

Pavilion Card for repeat visits

Choose this if you expect to return to Barcelona, study architecture, or simply like revisiting quiet places in different light. The personal card gives one year of unlimited pavilion access, which suits a site that changes with weather, season, and crowd levels more than with exhibitions. It is a niche product, but it fits unusually well here. Book now.

Family workshop dates

Great when children need something more active than a pure look-and-listen visit. The family workshop format turns the pavilion into a hands-on architecture stop, which is far easier for younger visitors than asking them to fall in love with marble on command. If the date works for your trip, this is the smartest family option. Book now.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this the same place as the Barcelona Pavilion?

Yes. Mies van der Rohe Pavilion, Barcelona Pavilion, and the local Pavelló Mies van der Rohe all refer to the same building on Montjuïc. It began as Germany's pavilion for the 1929 Barcelona International Exposition.
Read more.

How much time should I plan for the pavilion?

For most visitors, 45 to 60 minutes works well. If you want the audio guide, slow photo laps, or a second look at the materials and pools, plan 75 to 90 minutes.
Read more.

Do I need to book in advance?

You can buy at the entrance or online. Online is the better move if you want the audio-guide product or you are threading the stop between other Montjuïc visits. The first Sunday of each month is free and does not require a reservation.
Read more.

Is the audio guide included?

Yes, the included audio guide is available in Catalan, Spanish, English, French, German, and Italian. It is the easiest way to add context without committing to a guided group visit.
Read more.

When is the best time for photos?

Weekday mornings and the last 90 minutes of the day usually feel best. The water, marble, and glass read more clearly when visitor flow is lighter, so you spend less time waiting for a clean frame.
Read more.

Is the pavilion accessible for visitors with limited mobility?

Yes. The pavilion is listed as accessible for people with reduced mobility, and nearby public parking includes reduced-mobility spaces. That makes it one of the easier low-friction architecture stops on Montjuïc.
Read more.

Can I take photos or film inside?

For ordinary personal photos, this is one of the pavilion's great pleasures. Professional photography, filming, and commercial image use require prior authorization, so sort that out in advance if your visit is more than casual.
Read more.

Which nearby stops pair best with the pavilion?

For a compact design-and-art half-day, pair it with CaixaForum Barcelona or Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya. For a broader open-air plan, add Poble Espanyol and stop there, or descend toward the Magic Fountain of Montjuïc in the evening if you still want one more scene.
Read more.

General information

opening hours

The pavilion is open daily from 10 am to 8 pm from March to October and daily from 10 am to 6 pm from November to February. Entry is allowed until 15 minutes before closing. The pavilion is usually open every day except December 25, but short-notice closure or reduced-hour dates are posted separately.

tickets

General admission starts at €9, reduced admission costs €5, and visitors under 16 enter free. The first Sunday of each month is free with no reservation needed. The audio guide is included in Catalan, Spanish, English, French, German, and Italian, and the personal Pavilion Card costs €20 for one year of unlimited access.

address

Mies van der Rohe Pavilion
Av. Francesc Ferrer i Guàrdia, 7
08038 Barcelona
Spain

how to get there

Metro L1/L3 and FGC lines to Plaça d'Espanya are the easiest start, followed by a short walk along Avinguda de la Reina Maria Cristina. Bus lines 13 and 150 stop at Av Ferrer i Guàrdia - Mèxic. If fairs or events block the main avenue, use Carrer de Lleida instead.

accessibility

The pavilion is accessible for people with reduced mobility. Nearby public paid parking includes reduced-mobility spaces, which helps if you prefer not to manage the hill approach entirely on foot.

photography and filming

Professional photography, filming, and commercial image use require prior authorization. If you are bringing a tripod, crew, or branded shoot plan, arrange permission before you arrive.
How useful was this page?
Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0.
Language
English
Currency
© 2020-2026 TicketLens GmbH. All rights reserved. Made with love in Vienna.